Long-range interactions and evolutionary stability in a predator-prey system
Abstract
Evolving ecosystems often are dominated by spatially local dynamics, but many also include long-range transport that mixes spatially separated groups. The existence of such mixing may be of critical importance since research shows spatial separation may be responsible for long-term stability of predator-prey systems. Complete mixing results in rapid global extinction, while spatial systems achive long term stability due to an inhomogeneous spatial pattern of local extinctions. We consider the robustness of a generic evolving predator-prey or host-pathogen model to long-range mixing and find a transition to global extinction at nontrivial values implying that even if significant mixing already exists, a small amount of additional mixing may cause extinction. Our results are relevant to the global mixing of species due to human intervention and to global transport of infectious disease.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review E
- Pub Date:
- February 2006
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevE.73.020903
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhRvE..73b0903R
- Keywords:
-
- 87.23.Kg;
- 87.23.Cc;
- 89.75.Hc;
- Dynamics of evolution;
- Population dynamics and ecological pattern formation;
- Networks and genealogical trees